Help!
Okay, okay, this blog is
really more about support; the kind
of ‘help’ we get along the way, how a book is paradoxically a mostly ‘solo
effort and can be the most
collaborative thing we ever do.
(I didn’t think Support! was a very foxy title and we
all know how important titles are, right?)
My book Girl, Boy. Sea. has just been longlisted
for the CILIP Carnegie. I am thrilled. I
am also disbelieving. I’m waiting for a
teacherly voice to boom from the sky: ‘Is this all your own work?’ To which I
would have to reply: ‘Oh Yes I mean… you
know, mostly.’
When I started writing I
really did believe it was a solo effort. I didn’t even know what an editor was,
or did. The truth about the author, and the writing process is more complex than simply the name on the cover. A good editor can lift a book, a bad one can....hmmm. I'm lucky, I;ve only had really, really great ones. And in my experience, whilst the author must
always be the driver of the story, the wisdom, input and counsel of others is
not merely helpful, but invaluable.
So what, or who, am I
talking about?
Crit groups
Early drafts of early
chapters or scenes are road tested with an audience. Two times I have ditched WIPs and launched
new ones on the basis - at least in good part - of crit group input and responses. Because, how it works in my head and
how it works with an audience are different things. And then I find I write a little differently if I
know I will soon be sharing with with other writers.
I did this on the Bath
Spa Ma in Writing for Young People. I now do it with the wonderful Rogue
Critters South West SCWBI group.
What I have learned over
years is to do the opposite of what I
did when I first started critting. Namely, not to offer up the work of which I
am most confident, then hope for praise, but to use the valuable time to work
with others on the stuff I am really unsure
of; to get others’ input on the strengths and weaknesses. In short, to do the
work on the material that needs the most work.
One to one crit
This is much more in
depth, not least as I tend to go with as many as 5,000 words, and with a writer
chum who I really respect. I only do
this when I’m really pretty happy with the WIP.
Agent
My agent is the best (she
has actual prizes that prove that) and has a list of famous, brilliant and
literary writers. So simply pressing ‘send’ is pretty damn nerve-wracking.
I’ve heard different
tales about different agents in terms of their levels of ‘input;’ from the ones
who do the business side only, to those who do forensic line edits with their
authors before it goes to a publisher. Sometimes over more than a year.
My experience is
somewhere in between; I get input on idea, structure, tone, character and – as
with Girl. Boy. Sea, sometimes encouragement to
pursue a rich creative vein, even if it’s a bit, well, 'unusual.'
Editor/s
The big one. The final
input; from central idea to individual words. Top to bottom, 360. If you have good editors – and again, I do –
you listen.
So there you are, that’s
a lot of input. And it’s a foolish
writer who doesn’t consider the opinions of others, and the sage advice of
mentors.
There is however, one
massive caveat to all this.
You can’t write a book
by committee.
Strength of voice. Core
themes. The real nature of your characters. They came from you, and in the end
you need to be pretty sure of some key aspects of your story, and keep them as
they are, no matter what others think.
You need to listen,
collaborate and take advice. You also sometimes need to stick to your
guns.
Knowing when to do
which, or which to do when… that’s a bigger question.
2 comments:
I've never used crit groups, Chris (because I am an anti-social troll) but absolutely agree on the importance of editors. A professional editor who will crit your book impersonally is a prize above rubies - as is a friend brave enough to tell you bluntly where you're going wrong. They raise your game.
This is so true. I rely on my agent and editors to look at my work and tell me honestly where I am going wrong - and often, once I do the edits they suggest, I can see how right they are and feel so relieved , but I also agree with you that there has to be a time when you stick to your guns because you know who your characters are.
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